In a previous article, I put forward a three-point plan for testing mobile Web sites. One of the points involved the use of emulators for first-pass device testing. This article concentrates on configuring emulators for mobile site testing (it also highlights emulators that can be used to test mobile applications too). It outlines the different types of emulator available, the best ones to use, and the various ways in which they can be used.

For the uninitiated, an emulator is a software program that aims to replicate the functions of a specific piece of hardware or software.

About Device-Specific Testing

Desktop Web developers have it relatively easy – build in support for four or five browsers, and it’s job done. Not so on mobile. If you look at Wikipedia’s Mobile Browser page, you’ll see it lists at least 30+ different mobile browsers. In truth, there are probably many more. Look at the list of devices supported by DeviceAtlas and you’ll see it claims to support over 4,500. With these kinds of numbers in mind, how on earth are you supposed to test your Web site across all devices?

The simple answer is – you can’t. What you can do is test the site on at least one device from all popular manufacturers, and on as many of the mobile browsers as possible. This will give you a good idea of how the site works on different devices and will also help you to resolve any issues. The catch is making sure you have access to all of the necessary devices and mobile browsers. You may only be able to use one or two physical devices – not enough to adequately test on. But emulators can be used instead to allow you to simulate testing on the real device or browser. The benefits of this approach are many-fold:

No data browsing charges are incurred, as all browsing is performed via your standard Web connection

Provides access to a potentially large number of devices/browsers – the number of devices you can use is only limited by hard disk space and the number of emulators you can find

Inexpensive – many emulators are available for free

Types of Mobile Emulator

Mobile emulators fall into three main categories:

Device emulators - These are generally provided by device manufacturers and simulate the actual device. Device emulators are excellent for testing your site or application on a particular device or set of devices.

Browser emulators - These simulate mobile browser environments. Whilst useful for determining the functionality available in a particular mobile browser, they are useless for device-specific testing.

Operating System Emulators - Microsoft provides emulators for Windows Mobile, and Google provides an emulator for Android. These run within a simulated mobile device environment and provide access to applications running within the operating system, e.g. a Web browser.

Problems with Emulators

Emulators are great, but you should not assume that just because your site works perfectly on an emulator, it will function in the same way on the real device. Emulators can often differ in subtle ways from the devices they simulate; this is especially the case if the developer of the emulator is not the original creator of the device. Use emulators to cover a wide breadth of devices that you wouldn’t have access to, and fix any bugs you find; but make sure you test the site on some real devices too, just to be sure.

Popular Emulators

There are a large number of emulators available. The following companies offer emulators for some or all of their mobile devices (note the lists below are not exhaustive):

Research in Motion (BlackBerry)

Apple (iPhone)

Samsung

Palm

LG

Motorola

Operating system emulators are available from:

Microsoft (Windows Mobile)

Google (Android)

Nokia (Series 40 and Series 60)

Some available browser emulators are:

Opera Mini

Openwave

There are also some generic emulators – mobiForge offers an emulator which can be skinned as a Nokia N70 or a Sony K750. This is a useful starting point for basic testing. Yospace sells a smartphone emulator that supports a number of devices. However, most of the devices supported are now out of date (the Nokia 6310i, for example).

The remainder of this article will show you how to obtain, install, and use some freely available emulators. Some points to be aware of before we start:

Many of these downloads are big, so make sure you don’t exceed your download limit

Due to the size of the downloads, a fast Web connection is essential

Many developer portals will ask you to register – this is usually a painless process

As the emulators try to connect to the Internet, you may see firewall warnings; unblocking these will prevent them from reappearing

The emulators outlined in this article are grouped as follows:

Web-based emulators

Installable emulators

Symbian-based emulators

Emulators that can only be used to test applications

Web-based Emulators

Web-based emulators are easy and quick to access – no installation, no fuss. Just enter the correct URL and start testing.

Apple (iPhone) Emulators

What can be said about the iPhone that hasn’t been said already? The revolutionary device continues to take the market by storm. Unfortunately developing for the iPhone is somewhat locked down. You need:

A full iPhone emulator is included as part of the iPhone SDK. To obtain this, register with Apple as a developer.

This isn’t much good to those of us running Windows. Fortunately, there’s a FREE iPhone simulator available on the Web. It can be found at testiphone.com.

This provides a nice, quick way of testing your Web sites on a simulated iPhone. Just type in the URL of the site you want to test and hit ENTER (I’ve visited verymobile.mobi):

Testiphone.com simulator displaying verymobile.mobi site

Opera Mini

Opera Mini is probably the most popular user-installable browser. Opera offers an on-line simulator that allows you to run Web sites immediately. Head over to the demo site and enter the required URL into the browser. After a brief delay, the site will load:

Opera Mini simulator

Installable Emulators

Many device manufacturers offer free emulators; after all, they want you to develop for their platforms. More developers = more applications = more users = more revenue. Details about how to obtain, install, and use some of the more popular emulators are below.

Research in Motion Emulators

In my opinion, RIM offers the gold standard in emulators (or “simulators” in RIM terminology). I’ve come across very few discrepancies – the mobile device almost always behaves like the real device would (in fact, the only time I know a difference was found was during development of a J2ME application – and it was minor). The RIM emulators are available from the RIM Developer Zone. You’ll need to sign up for an account. This is a pretty painless process – just click the Sign Up link on the right-hand side of the screen (near to the login dialog).

Downloading

Once you’ve signed up, click on the Web Development Tools & Downloads link. You’ll see a section entitled BlackBerry Smartphone Simulator. Click the link and a page will be displayed, listing lots of different simulators. Simulators are grouped by the BlackBerry version number.

Blackberry simulator download options

You need to download at least two files:

BlackBerry Email and MDS Services Simulator Package - This program simulates the BlackBerry Enterprise Server. You will not be able to connect the simulator to the Internet without it.

Any BlackBerry Device Simulator - Clicking on a device simulator item in the drop-down list and clicking Next will display the simulators available in that group. You can download and install as many as you like.

The first item in the list is BlackBerry Email and MDS Services Simulator Package. Select this and click Next. A list of files will appear, offering different versions of the simulator. It’s generally OK to pick the latest version – if you find a simulator doesn’t work after downloading, download the matching MDS simulator package. Click on the Download link and you will be asked to enter your personal details. Rather annoyingly, you will be asked this every time you download a file, although checking the Remember Me box should pre-populate the data fields. Once your details are entered, click Next. You’ll now be asked to agree to the terms and conditions. If you agree, click Agree, then Next. A further set of terms and conditions are displayed. Click I Agree and Next to proceed.

You’ll finally be presented with a Download button. Click this and the file will begin downloading.

Repeat the process to download a device simulator package. Choose a BlackBerry Device Simulator from the drop-down list, and the site will display the device simulators available within that package. In the example below, I’ve selected BlackBerry Device Simulators v4.7.0, which offers lots of different devices:

Blackberry device simulators for v4.7.0

Click on the Download link for the device required (I chose 9500 smartphone (for Europe)). Make sure you click the “I confirm this information is correct” radio button on the registration form. Once you’ve accepted the terms and conditions, you can download. Be aware the BlackBerry simulator files are BIG! The Europe 9500 file is almost 72MB in size.

Once the files are downloaded, you are ready to install.

Installing and Running

You should have two BlackBerry files on your computer. The two files I downloaded were:

BlackBerry_Email_MDS_4.1.2.17.exe

BlackBerry_Simulators_4.7.0.122_9500_Europe.exe

Install the MDS first. It’s a typical wizard based installation. A couple of clicks of the Next button and you should be done.

Once that’s installed, do the same for the device simulator package you downloaded. Again, just keep clicking Next until the install is complete.

Open up your Start Menu and browse. You should see a Research In Motion program group. To run a BlackBerry simulator, you need to start the MDS, then the simulator. The MDS sub-folder has three programs located within it. We’re interested in the MDS program, as this gives us Web connectivity. Click it and it will run in a command window. Make sure you unblock the program if your firewall complains about it. Once started, minimise or ignore the command window.

Now start up the device simulator from the Smartphone Simulators sub-folder in the Start Menu. The simulator will appear:

Blackberry device simulator

Now open up the Web browser on the device and browse to a mobile site of your choice (I’ve gone to www.verymobile.mobi again). One nice touch here is you can either type using your keyboard, or simulate typing using the simulator’s on-screen keyboard. After a couple of seconds, the mobile site will load:

Blackberry device simulator displaying a web page

Note that the site is perfectly formatted on the device; this site uses device detection technologies to ensure it renders correctly. The Web server thinks it is serving pages to a BlackBerry 9500, and to all intents and purposes it is. Powerful stuff.

Once you’ve finished with the simulator, close it as you would any normal Windows program. Just remember you also need to close the command prompt the MDS is running within.

Other great features of the BlackBerry simulators:

Easy loading of Java programs via the File menu (for J2ME testing)

Ability to map mouse buttons

Take snapshots of the device or just the LCD

Ability to go full-screen for presentation purposes

Simulate events, such as incoming voice call (useful for applications that may be interrupted)

Remember there’s a huge number of BlackBerry device simulators available – in fact, there’s one for just about every BlackBerry there is. RIM are right on the ball when it comes to releasing them – the Storm simulator was available long before the device was. Use this powerful resource for testing and you won’t go far wrong.

Palm Emulators

Introduction and Downloading

Palm is making a big splash in the mobile world with its upcoming Pre. A Palm Pre emulator can be downloaded from the Palm developer site as part of the Mojo SDK. You need to register to download the SDK, which is available for Windows, Linux, and Mac. It is reliant on Java 6 and Virtual Box (Sun’s virtual machine software) being installed, links to both of which are provided on the download page. Again, be aware of the download size – Virtual Box is over 60MB and the Mojo SDK is around 176MB.

Installing and Running

Once you’ve downloaded everything, and made sure Java and Virtual Box are installed, you can install the Mojo SDK. Doing this is a snap; just click Next a couple of times. After installation is complete, a Palm folder will appear in your Start Menu. Click on this, then on SDK. You’ll see a Palm Emulator menu item. Click on this and the emulator will load (it runs as a VirtualBox virtual machine – you may receive a firewall warning):

Palm Pre emulator

This emulator emulates a Palm Pre running the Palm WebOS. Click on the black arrow icon and the menu will appear. Click on Web to launch the Web browser. Type in the URL of the Web site you want to test and it will load up in the WebOS browser:

Palm Pre emulator displaying web page

This is a really powerful emulator and is well worth downloading. The Mojo API also contains lots of interesting sample projects, so download it and have a play.

Microsoft Emulators

Introduction

Microsoft has invested a lot in Windows Mobile, and continues to do so despite a relatively poor market share. A big benefit of developing for Windows Mobile is the ability to use a .NET language, and this attracts many developers to the platform. There are numerous issues with the operating system, which many are hoping will be fixed in version 7, due for release in 2010. An interim 6.5 release is due in September 2009.

There are numerous manufacturers of mobile handsets running Windows Mobile operating systems; the most prolific is HTC, which has been supplying Windows Mobile handsets for a number of years. Emulator skins are available for most Windows Mobile handsets from various manufacturers (Samsung for example).

Downloading and Installing

Note that if you are running Visual Studio 2008, there’s a chance you already have Windows Mobile emulation installed. This article assumes you do not have Visual Studio 2008 installed.

Using and Configuring Microsoft Emulators

Once this little lot is installed (it will be heavy on your download bandwidth), open Windows Explorer. Microsoft Device Emulator does not add an entry to the Start Menu. Browse to C:\Program Files\Microsoft Device Emulator\1.0 and run the dvcemumanager.exe program. This displays a management screen, listing all the types of emulator available to you:

Microsoft emulator options

Highlight the emulator image required, right-click, and choose Connect from the context menu. This will start the emulator:

Microsoft Device emulator

However, if you try to connect to a Web site using Pocket Internet Explorer you’ll be told you cannot connect. This is because three things need to happen before the device can connect to the Internet:

It must be cradled - The emulated device needs to connect to ActiveSync or WMDC. To do this, return to the Device Emulator Manager, right-click on the emulator image currently running (it will have a green “play” icon next to it) and select the Cradle option. The icon will change to a small linked pipe

The network card must be bound to the device - This is why Virtual PC is required. The emulator window provides three menus – File, Flash, and Help. Click on File and choose Configure. Click on the Network tab and check the “Enable NE2000 PCMCIA network adapter and bind to:”. You should see Connected Network Card selected in the drop-down list. It’s usually fine to leave this as is; but feel free to change it if required. Click OK to save your selection

Microsoft emulator network options

Windows Mobile must be told the network card is used to connect to the Internet - This needs to happen within the emulated operating system itself. Depending upon the version of Windows Mobile used, you need to browse to the Connections section. This is usually accessed via Start/Settings/Connections. Once you’re there, click Network Cards. In the box that reads “My network card connects to”, choose The Internet. Click OK/X a few times to return to the home screen

More Microsoft Device Emulator networking fun

This is all a bit long-winded, but once you’ve done it you can save the configuration so you don’t have to do it again. You do need to repeat the process for each emulator image though.

Finally, you can test out a Web site on Windows Mobile. Click Start, then Internet Explorer. Type in the URL required and it will appear in the emulator.

Microsoft Device Emulator displaying web page

As an alternative to the steps above, you can download full SDKs for the more recent versions of Windows Mobile. SDKs, including emulators, are available for Windows Mobile 6 and Windows Mobile 6.5. If you install either of these, a Start Menu folder called Windows Mobile 6 SDK is created. This contains a Standalone Emulator Images sub-folder, and within this are a number of emulators. Click on the emulator required to start it – here’s a screenshot of what should be The Register’s mobile site running under Internet Explorer on Windows Mobile 6.5 (you’ll still need to go through the process of configuring the network card and setting it to use “The Internet” in the operating system, but you shouldn’t have to cradle the device):

Microsoft Device Emulator displaying full desktop web page

Windows Mobile 6.5 tries to identify itself as a desktop browser (it loads the desktop version of the BBC Web site, for example), so mobile sites don’t render correctly. This is something to think about whilst testing for Windows Mobile 6.5.

Microsoft does not make it easy to install Windows Mobile emulators, but once you’ve set them up they’re generally nice and easy to use. It’s well worth it if you need to target the platform as part of your development strategy.

Android Emulator

Introduction

The Android operating system, backed by Google and other major industry names, currently seems best placed to challenge Apple’s perceived dominance of the smartphone market. Android is certainly here to stay for the foreseeable future, so it makes sense to test your applications on it (or at least a virtual version of it). There’s a bit of work involved in setting up the emulator, but once you’ve done this you can test mobile Web sites in addition to debugging applications.

Downloading and Installing

As with almost all emulator providers listed in this article, start by visiting the developer portal. Also as with most emulator providers, you have to download the full SDK in order to obtain the emulator. It’s another big download I’m afraid.

You need to have the Eclipse Development Environment installed to use the Android SDK. Ensure you download a Java version of Eclipse. To install the entire Android environment is a long-winded process:

Unzip the downloaded Eclipse file and save it to a folder of your choosing

Unzip the downloaded Android SDK and save it to a folder of your choosing

Copy the location of the Android SDK’s tools folder to the clipboard

Go to the Start Menu, right-click on Computer, and choose Properties

Click on Advanced System Settings, and then on Environment Variables

In the System Variables list, find the Path variable

Highlight Path, click Edit, and press the End key to move to the end of the string

Type a semi-colon, then paste in the location of the Android SDK’s tools folder

You should now be able to compile the application and run it on the emulator. To do this, click on the Run menu, click Run, and then choose Android Application from the list that appears

The emulator will take a short while to load and you’ll see an Android logo whilst it is doing this. Once loaded, the Hello World application is displayed:

Android Hello World app

It’s easy to load up and debug your Android applications. It’s also easy now to test mobile Web sites. Click on the Home button, then on the Browser icon. This launches the Web browser. Enter the URL you require and it will load up (Use Menu\Go to enter a URL):

Openwave

Openwave’s browser is used on several handsets. The company provides a simulator, freely available for download (subject to registration). Registration only takes a moment, and the download itself is a relatively small 6.5MB in size. Unfortunately I couldn’t download from the Openwave site as the link was broken. Typing openwave_v70_simulator.exe into Google rectified the problem however.

Installation is the usual process of clicking Next. To launch the emulator, open the Start Menu and find Openwave v7 Simulator, expand it, and click Openwave v7 Simulator.

Open the browser in the emulator that appears, enter a URL, and the site will load:

Openwave state different types of device skins can be loaded.

Openwave simulator

Symbian-based Emulators

Thanks to Nokia’s adoption of the platform, Symbian is one of the most prevalent platforms used on mobile devices (it’s also used on some Sony and Samsung devices amongst others). There are SDKs available for the various Symbian flavours. We’ll concentrate on the Series 60 SDK. Manufacturers are free to include different emulators with the SDK, as you’ll see. The included emulators can be used to test mobile applications as well as Web sites.

Symbian S60 Emulators

We highlight two installations of the S60 SDK here – one provided by Samsung, and another by Nokia. Both of these organisations offer development portals:

The SDK download from either of these sites is around 600MB. You’ll need to register with both sites to download. As both of these SDKs are essentially the same, they both have the same pre-requisites; you need to have Perl 5.6.1 or higher already installed (you will see a warning if this is not installed – the link points to the Strawberry Perl installer).

When installing, you’ll notice the emulator is the only component that must be installed (choose the Custom set-up type to see optional components). If you only require the emulator, uncheck all other options; otherwise, select the required items before clicking Next. If you have no plans to develop Symbian applications, it’s worth unchecking the various options, as this installation will use a lot of space on your hard disk (1.74GB approx). The emulator alone requires over 1GB of space.

If you do want to develop Symbian applications, you’ll need the Eclipse development IDE. The installer will prompt you for the location of this (you can leave it blank if you don’t use Eclipse).

Samsung Emulators

To download the Symbian SDK from Samsung, click the Symbian link on the home page.

Samsung Symbian homepage

On the page that loads, click on S60 5th Edition SDK in the Tools & SDKs list. Download v1.0 of this SDK (this is the latest version available at the time of writing).

Once installation has completed, there will be a S60 Developer Tools entry in the Start Menu. One of the links is to an Emulator. Click on this and the emulator will load.

S60 Emulator

Select the required country from the list, then the required city. Set the date and time and you’re presented with the home screen. Click on the browser icon to open the Web browser. Type in the required URL and it will appear on-screen.

S60 Emulator displaying web page

You can change the layout of the screen. The default is 360x640. Clicking on the icon next to QHD portrait... at the top of the screen will cycle through the available layouts.

S60 Emulator with screen in landscape

This is useful if you are resizing images dynamically in your mobile site; the options available can be used to determine whether images are being resized correctly.

Nokia Emulators

Considering Nokia is the largest manufacturer of mobile devices in the world, there are surprisingly few emulators available for their devices. In fact, it seems there aren’t any at all, other than the emulators included in the SDKs (Yospace did offer some Nokia emulators but they are all quite old devices now, and Nokia themselves haven’t released a standalone emulator since 2004).

SDKs can be obtained from Forum Nokia. There are many SDKs available; I’ve downloaded the version for the Nokia N97. At the end of the Nokia installation, you are asked to select the default device. There are two options – Nokia N97 or s60 5th Edition.

Choosing Nokia device emulator

Make sure Nokia N97 is selected, then click Next and Finish to complete the installation. To run the emulator, go to the Start Menu, find the Nokia Developer Tools folder, and drill down until you hit the program list. Click on Emulator and the Nokia N97 emulator will load (make sure you unblock any firewall requests).

The process is the same as using the Samsung Symbian emulator; choose a country, then a city, set the date and time, and you’ll arrive at the device home screen. The first time I tried to load up the Web browser I received an error:

Nokia N97 emulator

This happens if any widgets are running on the home screen. Rebooting the device should resolve this. Once the browser opens, enter a URL and the site will load up.

Nokia N97 emulator displaying webpage

As with the Samsung version, this emulator can also be used to test mobile applications.

Emulators Used For Application-only Testing

Some SDKs provide emulators that can only be used to test mobile applications. Many of the J2ME SDKs are cases in point. Whilst this renders them useless for mobile site testing, it provides application developers with a useful and quick way to debug applications.

The J2ME SDKs are all reskinned versions of kToolbar, a minimal but useful Java development environment. Installing this is easy; unzip the downloaded file, and keep clicking Next until installation is complete. Download size is around 60MB per version of the SDK. You need to be running the Java 2 SDK 1.6 or later to install any of the J2ME SDKs.

J2ME Emulators

Samsung

Samsung’s Java toolkit includes a number of device emulators. To download this, visit the Java section of the Samsung Innovator Web site, and click on the link for the SDK required in the Tools & SDKs list (I chose v1.1, released on May 28th 2009). Once installed, you’ll see a Samsung SDK 1.1 for the Java(TM) ME Platform entry in your Start Menu. This contains a number of programs. Opening up KToolbar displays a mini development project management environment, which comes with a number of sample projects. Open up one of these and click on the Devices tab. Choose Samsung-Devices from the drop-down list and a number of Samsung devices appear on-screen.

Choosing device emulator in Samsung SDK

Highlight one of these devices and click the Run icon on the toolbar. This starts the project in the required emulator. There is a Run MIDP Application link in the program group, which points at the emulator executable. This had no effect on my Vista SP1 machine, you may have more luck.

The emulators work well with the Java projects, but do seem a bit slow (SGH-J700 sample displayed below).

Samsung SGH-J700 device emulator

LG

LG are one of the doyens of mobile; they’re the third-largest mobile phone manufacturer in the world. The company provides a detailed developer portal, which offers numerous tools. One of these is a Java ME SDK, and it includes an emulation environment for testing purposes. Once you’ve pointed your browser at LG’s developer site, click on the Java SDK and Skin Package link. There are currently three versions of the API, all of which contain an emulator; it’s best to download the latest. You’ll also see lots of skin packages; these allow you to set the emulator skin to various LG devices. You don’t actually need to register to download LG’s SDK – just click on the link and wait for the file to download. The same goes for the skins. It’s best not to download the skins separately; instead, use the Skins Update Center in the LG development environment.

After everything has installed, look in your Start Menu for a folder called LG SDK 1.3 for the Java(TM) ME Platform. There’s a program item with the same name; click this to open the development environment.

LG SDK

After opening a project, select the required target platform from the drop-down list – either LG MIDP 2.0 or LG MIDP 2.0 MVM. Different devices will be displayed depending upon the selection made (there’s also a generic LG device). Highlight the device required and click the Run toolbar icon. The application will run and be displayed on the emulator:

LG device emulator

Summary

This article does not purport to list every mobile emulator available; others are out there (e.g. the BREW SDK contains a BREW emulator). It does give a good overview of a number of free emulators and outlines how to install, configure and use said emulators to test mobile sites and applications. Many of the emulators come as part of an SDK, so you can start building and testing using them straightaway.

Emulators give you access to many platforms and “devices” that you may not have been able to test on otherwise. Whilst it is wise to exercise caution when using an emulator (remember there may be slight differences between the emulator and the “real thing”), they generally give a good indication of whether something will work on the real device or not. Emulators can save you a lot of money and time, so try using them as part of your test plans.

Mike McQuillan began developing software professionally after graduating from university with a 1st class Honours degree in Computer Studies in 1999. Since then he has worked for small companies (five employees) and large PLCs, such as Experian. He has developed just about every type of software there is – Windows client/server, Web systems, services, Unix systems, and now mobile systems. He is the CTO at Mdev Technology, a mobile software development company, and he also runs his own consultancy firm, McQTech.
He's been working on mobile since 2006 and has built up a comprehensive knowledge of what works and what doesn’t, especially on the mobile Web. He mainly concentrates on using .NET and SQL Server but has developed systems for Apple's mobile devices, Android, and Windows Phone 7 too.

Many Thanks - this is an extremely useful artcile (great "signal-to-noise" :) )

But what is the story with OpenWave? I went there a few weeks ago to get their highly recommended browser/emulator, to find as you did a broken link as well as "Openwave no longer supports or maintains any of the tools featured on this site. " on the home page. And yet just about every mobi resource on the net points to it..... :(

Having the file name (and google search as suggested) has rectified that. :)

A very informative and useful article.
I'm a MS WinVista Home Premium edition user and use a WM6.1 mobile phone as my modem.
The RIM emulator downloads and installs well.
Then I downloaded and installed Microsoft Device Emulator 3.0, the emulator images for the Windows Mobile operating systems (Windows Mobile 6 and WM6.1 USA), Virtual PC 2007. I already had Windows Mobile Device Centre downloaded and installed.

I went through all these steps only to find this emulator setup does not work on MS WVista HP edition! All the WV OS updates are downloaded, installed and working fine. A version of the Device Emulator Manager does launch, but with no .decfg files available. The images did download as well as the Virtual PC 2007 and seem to be running ok.

I did a bit of research on forums etc. and found others have got this to work after a bit of a struggle, but it should be noted MS does not support the Device Emulator Manager when used on WVista HP edition. This might save others quite a bit of time.

I am a bit new to all this, so perhaps I've missed something obvious. Any ideas, do let me know.
Thanks

Sorry for my delayed reply. I can't say I noticed any speed deficiencies when using the Android emulator. This seems to be a common issue though and a lot of it seems potentially related to individual machine configuration (according to Google).

If you are trying to get the Android Emulators going, and are having trouble because no targets are found after setting up the SDK in Eclipse, check out this link. It helped me, and it may help you too!

Hello,
This is quite useful.Thanks for drafting it nicely.
Could you please let me know the below details:
1. What all are browsers supported by Blackberry OS
2.History of Blakcberry OS( from 1st version to till date)
3.Which is thebest emulator for Blackberry

Once launched, the emulator is already connected to your network but you must configure windows mobile's network settings. From witih Windows Mobile, go to Settings, Connections, Network Cards and select NE2000 Compatible ethernet driver. Check that the emulator is succesfully connected to the Internet. If failed make sure that you are connected to the correct network from the upper tray icon. bike accident lawyer

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